“Ripples” of Galaxies—Another Blow to the Big Bang

Astronomers have recently claimed to detect a "ripple" pattern in the clustering of galaxies in the Sloan Digital Sky Survey. This new discovery is consistent with Biblical creation.

Astronomers have recently claimed to detect a “ripple” pattern in the
clustering of galaxies in the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS).1 They claim this pattern is a result of sound waves
produced during the big bang. However, as with all things, it is important to distinguish
between the data and the interpretation. The new discovery does not support
the big bang, and is in fact perfectly consistent with biblical creation.

Background

All the stars you see in the nighttime sky are part of the Milky Way galaxy—a
large spiral collection of over one-hundred billion stars. The
universe contains many such galaxies: some smaller than ours, others much bigger.

Galaxies are organized into clusters, which are organized on an even larger scale
forming a large nonuniform structure of filaments and voids. You can think of this like a
gigantic, irregular spiderweb; the galaxies exist primarily along the strands of the web,
with fewer in between.

New discovery

Until recently, the galaxy clustering did not show any well-defined pattern or size
scale; filaments of galaxies connect in seemingly random ways and come in many different
sizes. But, investigators have apparently discovered a weak “pattern” in the
arrangement of galaxies.

Galaxies have a very slight preference to be separated by 500 million light-years (3
billion-million-million miles) than other distances, according to SDSS researchers. This
pattern is extremely weak; you would not be able to see it by eye. The SDSS researchers
have used some mathematical techniques to extract this ethereal pattern.

Data vs. interpretation

This subtle organization of galaxies is the data. The interpretation
that many astronomers have offered is that sound waves from the big bang produced this
pattern. Let’s examine this interpretation:

In the big bang story of origins, the universe starts out very small and very dense.
Some regions are slightly denser than others. This imbalance creates pressure waves
(sound 2) which propagate
through the early universe. Much like a rock thrown in a pond causes ripples to expand,
imagine many rocks being thrown in at the same time. The interaction of all the waves
would cause a complicated, irregular pattern of ripples. In the big bang model, the sound
propagating in the early universe creates regions of greater density.3 Eventually, gravity causes these denser
regions to collapse to form stars and galaxies as the universe expands. So, in essence,
the sound waves act as “seeds” for galaxies to form.

This interpretation simply assumes that the big bang is true.

Secular astronomers believe that the weak pattern detected in galaxy locations (the
data) is a result of the sound waves from the big bang (the interpretation). Notice that
this interpretation simply assumes that the big bang is true. The biases of the
researchers have affected their interpretation of the data. The evidence has been
interpreted to match their beliefs.

The big bang, however, has been refuted on the basis of both Scripture and good
science. For example, the big bang is not compatible with the order, timescale and cause
of the events of creation as recorded in Genesis. Really, the big bang is a secular
alternative to the Bible.

So, this weak cluster-pattern of galaxies does not support the big bang with
its billions of years. On the contrary, the big bang is simply assumed in order to
explain this clustering within a naturalistic framework.

Furthermore, the big bang is not the only unwarranted assumption involved in the
“sound waves” interpretation. The secular explanation also assumes that stars
and galaxies can form from regions of high density. But this has never been observed. No
galaxy has ever been observed to form at all. And there are tremendous scientific difficulties in getting stars to form from collapsing gas clouds. No wonder that even many secular scientists blast the big bang.

Consistent with creation

From a biblical creation view, there is no reason to think that the clusters of
galaxies were formed by sound waves at all. We know from Scripture that God made the
stars (and thus the galaxies which are comprised of stars) on Day 4 of the Creation Week (Genesis 1:16). It may be that the galaxies were organized in a nonrandom way by the
Creator’s hand for His pleasure. The subtle pattern of galaxy locations (if
confirmed) would be perfectly consistent with the order and creativity we have come to
expect from the God of Scripture.

Footnotes

Sound cannot travel through
empty space because sound waves are compressions of a material medium. However, the early
universe (according to the big bang cosmology) would have been very dense. It would not
have been “empty” and this would have allowed sound to travel.

The regions of higher
density in the Cosmic Microwave Background are also supposedly produced in a similar
fashion. However, the weakness of the ripples is highly problematic for big bang
cosmology. See Light travel-time: a problem for the big bang.

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Answers in Genesis is an apologetics ministry, dedicated to helping Christians defend their faith and proclaim the gospel of Jesus Christ effectively. We focus on providing answers to questions about the Bible—particularly the book of Genesis—regarding key issues such as creation, evolution, science, and the age of the earth.